Hi All,

It seems that the question of how may people use (or download) R, and it's 
packages is one that comes up on a fairly regular basis in a variety of forums 
(There was also recent thread on the subject on Stack Overflow). A couple of 
students at UCLA (including myself), wanted to address the issue, so we set up 
a system to get and parse the cran.stat.ucla.edu APACHE logs every night, and 
display some basic statistics. Right now, we have a working sketch of a site 
based on one week of observations.

http://neolab.stat.ucla.edu/cranstats/

We would very much like to incorporate data from all CRAN mirrors, including 
cran.r-project.org. We would also like to set this up in a way that is 
minimally invasive for the site administrators. Internally, our administrator 
has set up a protected directory with the last couple days of cran activity. We 
then pull that down using curl.

What would be the best and easiest way for the CRAN mirrors to share their 
data? Is the contact information for the administrators available anywhere?


Thank you,
Ian Fellows



________________________________________
From: r-devel-boun...@r-project.org [r-devel-boun...@r-project.org] On Behalf 
Of Steven McKinney [smckin...@bccrc.ca]
Sent: Thursday, November 19, 2009 2:21 PM
To: Kevin R. Coombes; r-devel@r-project.org
Subject: Re: [Rd] R Usage Statistics

Hi Kevin,

What a surprising comment from a reviewer for BMC Bioinformatics.

I just did a PubMed search for "limma" and "aroma.affymetrix",
just two methods for which I use R software regularly.
"limma" yields 28 hits, several of which are published
in BMC Bioinformatics.  Bengtsson's aroma.affymetrix paper
"Estimation and assessment of raw copy numbers at the single locus level."
is already cited by 6 others.

It almost seems too easy to work up lists of usage of R packages.

Spotfire is an application built around S-Plus that has widespread use
in the biopharmaceutical industry at a minimum.  Vivek Ranadive's
TIBCO company just purchased Insightful, the S-Plus company.
(They bought Spotfire previously.)
Mr. Ranadive does not spend money on environments that are
not appropriate for deploying applications.

You could easily cull a list of corporation names from the
various R email listservs as well.

Press back with the reviewer.  Reviewers can learn new things
and will respond to arguments with good evidence behind them.
Good luck!


Steven McKinney


________________________________________
From: r-devel-boun...@r-project.org [r-devel-boun...@r-project.org] On Behalf 
Of Kevin R. Coombes [krcoom...@mdacc.tmc.edu]
Sent: November 19, 2009 10:47 AM
To: r-devel@r-project.org
Subject: [Rd] R Usage Statistics

Hi,

I got the following comment from the reviewer of a paper (describing an
algorithm implemented in R) that I submitted to BMC Bioinformatics:

"Finally, which useful for exploratory work and some prototyping,
neither R nor S-Plus are appropriate environments for deploying user
applications that would receive much use."

I can certainly respond by pointing out that CRAN contains more than
2000 packages and Bioconductor contains more than 350. However, does
anyone have statistics on how often R (and possibly some R packages) are
downloaded, or on how many people actually use R?

Thanks,
    Kevin

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